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Zazen and psychotherapeutic presence
American Journal of Psychotherapy
Format: Journal Article
Publication Year: 2000
Publisher: Association for the Advancement of Psychotherapy
Place of Publication: New York, NY
Pages: 531-548
Sources ID: 126484
Visibility: Public (group default)
Abstract: (Show)

Zen meditation, or zazen, has attracted the interest of many psychotherapists. The teachings and practices of the Soto Zen tradition are understood as encouraging important areas of both psychological and spiritual development. Zen, like the relational psychoanalytic theories, encourages its practitioners to become aware of the fundamentally distorted aspects of an overly individualistic view of human experience. As a spiritual practice, zazen increases the practitioner's tolerance and appreciation of the Wholeness that Buddhists refer to as Emptiness. As a psychological practice, it helps us to be more flexibly and intimately present with our patients. An effective therapeutic process, even of the most secular type, will often contain elements of the meditative process of zazen, and failure to actualize this in psychotherapy can have a negative impact on our ability to understand and help our patients.

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